As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

Cooking With Magic

by Lisa Oliver

“I would never hurt you… Please don’t flinch like that. You need to come with me, that’s all, and for that I need to touch you.”

Hellhound Faron wasn’t expecting anything when he went to his local diner for a meal before heading home. He might have privately hoped that he could catch sight of his favorite chef, Patrick, but the food was worth eating anyway. What he doesn’t expect, when he’s finished his meal, was to find Patrick sitting in a rusty truck at the back of the diner parking lot, with tears and bruises covering his face. Faron had to do something.

“…when I went to get out of the truck, the coma kicked in. This is all a coma-induced dream. It’s amazing.”

Patrick Duncan didn’t expect his favorite hottie from the diner to find him crying in a rusty truck, and he definitely didn’t expect to collapse in a coma-dream straight afterward. But that had to have been what had happened to him. How else could he find himself in Scotland, having a wonderful meal and being taken on a walk to find a magical tree.

Dreams quickly became reality and Patrick has a lot of adjustments to make finding out he’s the mate of a hellhound. Shadow puppies aside, Faron still wants to deal with the man responsible for Patrick’s bruises. Unfortunately, that wasn’t as easy as it sounded. And what was the message Patrick’s dead Mom trying to send Patrick in relation to his magic? Magic Patrick didn’t think he even had.

As with all of my stories, your HEA is guaranteed. It’s not imperative to read the other books in this series before this one, but it helps to get a handle on the secondary characters that populate these pages.

This book is on:
  • 2 Read lists
Excerpt:

Chapter One

From the Epilogue of Cain’s Shadow

Tipping his hat at Carol at the counter, Faron slid his bulk into the narrow booth. He could have taken a chair at one of the six tables scattered around the room, but Faron wasn't keen on being in the middle of anything. The booth, while narrow for someone of his size, gave him the opportunity to sit with his back to the wall and keep an eye on anyone approaching.

“What will it be today, Mr. Faron?” Carol was likely in her early twenties and always had a smile for him, something Faron appreciated. He was considered more rugged than handsome, and most people could sense there was something ‘other’ about him. Something that set off their fight or flight instincts. Which is why Faron kept coming back to the local diner, even if their booths were too small. Carol smile was worth the table digging into his gut.

READ MORE

“What have you got that's different today?” Faron was hungry. He'd spent the morning shifting hay bales and was only in town long enough to gather supplies for his animals before heading off for the afternoon. He was excited to meet Ollie and Cain’s new little girl and was planning to be in Scotland before their dinnertime. “I want something with plenty of meat and less on the veggie side of things.”

“Oh, Mr. Faron, everyone needs their vegetables,” Carol laughed. “We have stew with vegetables, or you can have the roast meal and I can ask Patrick to double the meat and half the rest. How does that sound?”

Ah, Patrick. Yet another reason Faron kept coming back to the diner. Faron didn't get a chance to see him very often as the man worked in the kitchen. But his occasional glimpses were enough to fuel Faron's fantasies. “The altered roast sounds wonderful. Thank you kindly.”

“Won’t be long,” Carol sang as she poured him a glass of water, then skipped off, likely to ring up his order. Faron pulled out his phone and scrolled through the latest photos Ollie had sent him. Their little Poppy is so darn cute. Faron rubbed his chest, easing the ache of longing just seeing the family pictures always seem to bring up.

/~/~/~/~/

Half an hour later, Faron had eaten, paid, and was stepping out. He hadn't seen Patrick at all, but the food was delicious as per normal. His truck was parked across the road, but something was tugging his hound towards the back of the diner and Faron couldn't work out why.

He checked the street. Nothing was out of place. Llano wasn't a big town, but it had everything that Faron needed. Normally Faron would drive in, get his supplies, eat at the diner - and he done all those things. But for some reason, his hound wasn't keen on the idea of him getting back in his truck. Acting on instinct, Faron dug his hands into his pockets and slowly wandered down the street, ducking down the side alley so he could get a look at the back of the restaurant.

I think you're shitting me. Faron mentally complained to his hound when he couldn't see anything but a few dumpsters and a rusty truck that had seen better days. But just as he turned to go back the way he came, he heard someone crying. It was soft. Faron only heard it at all because he was a hellhound. But something in him was pushing him to find out who was crying and why.

Since when do we become good Samaritans? Faron was a decent enough man, but the complexities of human emotion had always eluded him. That's why he'd been in awe seeing Cain, his pack mate, settled down and having a child with his mate. But now as Faron moved cautiously towards the rusted out truck, because the sound couldn't have come from anywhere else, he wondered if he showed more caring for people, then maybe the Fates would bless him, too.

The dumpsters under the hundred degree heat were doing a lot to mask the scent of anything else. The closer Faron got to the truck, the more agitated his hound became. There was something in the air - something other than garbage, but Faron couldn't work out what it was. He spied a mop of dark hair in the driver's side of the truck. Is that Patrick? The purple streaks on the top of the head confirmed it definitely was. And the sobbing sound was coming from the truck, too.

I shouldn't interfere. If the man's upset... And yeah, Faron just couldn't let Patrick be upset. No culinary artist should ever be crying in a rusty truck. It just didn't sit right with him.

Approaching cautiously, Faron kicked a can that he'd stepped on, so intent on watching Patrick. The chef looked up. His eyes were red rimmed and damp, shock written all over his face. But shock wasn't the only thing Faron could see. The man… the wonderful Patrick's handsome face was bruised from eye to jawline and Faron saw red.

Wrenching open the truck door, he snarled. “Who did this to you? Who do I have to kill to make this right?”

 

COLLAPSE

About the Author

Lisa Oliver's first fiction book was The Reluctant Wolf, book one in the Cloverleah series. Since then she's written more than ninety other titles spanning a number of different series including Bound and Bonded, Stockton Wolves, Balance, The God's Made Me Do it, City Dragons, The Necromancer's Smile, and the Alpha and Omega series. A huge fan of the true mate trope, Lisa's books are all paranormal, all M/M (although a few M/M/M have crept in too) and all have an HEA.

When not writing, Lisa can be found with her nose in a book. Her adult children and grandchildren have found the best way to get her off the computer is to offer her chocolate.